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| Rocheworld | 
enlarge | Author: Robert L. Forward Publisher: Baen Category: Book
List Price: $6.99 Buy Used: $0.10 You Save: $6.89 (99%)
New (3) Used (41) Collectible (4) from $0.10
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 356177
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 470 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.2 x 1.2
ISBN: 0671698699 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780671698690 ASIN: 0671698699
Publication Date: April 1, 1990 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Cover wear and may contain some marks or writing. Keen Northwest ships in 2 business days or less. Refunds for any reason if item returned within 30 days of shipment.
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Product Description Powered by a revolutionary laser-driven stardrive, the first interstellar expedition would reach the double planet circling Barnard's Star -- and find a world of wonders and dangers beyond all their imaginings.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Terrible Book -- Immature Writing September 28, 2003 10 out of 25 found this review helpful
To say the least, I'm very upset with the other three reviews here which all gave this book a five star rating. It's just not so. This book is terrible. Essentially, it's like reading a comic book. All the characters are one-sided, extreme caricatures. I got through about page forty (where the main "characters" are picking their crew) before I couldn't take it any more. Every new "character" was a new oddball. I mean, forget about these people being characters in a book. Just think about them as forming a small crew who are going on a one-way mission in a tin can. They'll be en-route for forty years and studying the new system for twenty more. No organization in the universe would pick these people as crew. They wouldn't make it to Mars orbit before they ended up killing each other. Every member of the crew would have been psychologically screened until their brains fell out of their heads. The people who survived that screening and were deemed capable of living in extremely close quarters with a couple of handfuls of other people for the rest of their lives would have trained together for YEARS just to make sure everything was OK. This book is a joke as science fiction. Either that, or it was written for the youth market. Terrible, terrible book. Avoid.
Uniqe aliens. sensitive and smart. May 30, 2000 9 out of 12 found this review helpful
This is the only Robert Forward book i've read, but I would like to try some more. The "Fluben" are the most interesting aliens i've read about except maybe the "Moties" from "The mote in god's eye". They are very diffrent anatomically from human beings ,which is logical ,and they are all mathematical geniuses. They're all brain. that is, their whole body ( which is a cloud of a dense fluid hovering in the ocean )is allso the thinking organ. They can become smaller, tighter and harder, form a "rock" and in that state they are even more smart then usual ( and the usual is something like 400 i.q's ). Another thing about this book is that the aliens and the humans don't fight, they get along and like each other. the opponent is nature. Buy the book, it's an interesting read.
Forward is my favorite living Hard SF writer February 22, 1999 8 out of 11 found this review helpful
This is my favorite version of the three similar stories, all by Dr Forward. I first read Flight of the DragonFly (4.5 stars). A couple of years later, I read the full version of Rocheworld (Flight + parts of an earlier Rocheworld edition + additional material) and all of its sequels. I liked it even more than Dragon's Egg, my previous Forward Favorite.
For the one who likes Asimov August 2, 1998 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is a really good story which in fact has a high probability to really occur. A sailing spacecraft is in fact possible. The star system that is visited seems to be possible, even if it isn't very likely from a celestial point of view that two planets should exist in such a constellation. I will anyway recommend this book!
Great Hard SciFi October 28, 2005 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Like most of Robert Forward's books, this one is for those who love Science at least as much as fiction. Though the life forms in Rocheworld were not as interesting as those he created in Dragon's Egg, I appreciate the fact that he continued to challenge the idea that all life should be (even remotely) like that on Earth. The idea of a culture far beyond ours intellectually, without the least bit of industry or technology also questions assumptions about what is an "advanced" civilization. But I think my favorite parts of this book were the ideas for long-distance space travel (Forward pioneered the use of solar sails) and the physics of the double-egg shaped world, including the tides and "snow" under the ammonia ocean.
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